Anyone running the beta can enable the dark theme by navigating to ‘Settings’ and selecting ‘Battery.’ From there, tap on and enable ‘Battery Saver.’ Now, some of Android’s system-level features will turn to black instead of white. This is the easiest way to turn on Android Q’s dark mode feature.

Two similar features are available in Android 9 Pie. One is a ‘Dark Theme under the ‘Advanced’ ‘Display Settings.’ The second is called ‘Night Mode,’ a feature users can through the phone’s ‘Developer Options.’ All versions of Android Q’s dark theme more closely resemble Night Mode.

Take note though, enabling dark mode via Battery Saver includes all of the features and drawbacks that come along with it. Battery Saver results in apps not refreshing their content until a user looks at them. It also turns off location services when the screen isn’t active and stops apps from performing background tasks, according to the Google Pixel support page. On the other hand, it also extends your battery life considerably.

Instead, the dark modes you can try in Q only change the notification shade, settings app, homescreen folder shade, the files app and Google Feed.

There are other ways to enable the dark mode in the beta, but they’re more difficult to pull off. Twitter user @HANI_4k, who reached out to MobileSyrup, says that if you turn on Night Mode on a Pixel phone running Android 9 in the ‘Developer Settings’ and then update to Q, the beta then features a dark theme if you’re using a dark wallpaper.